Grischuk storms to victory over Yu Yangyi

After
the quiet start and rest day it was all about Alexander Grischuk in Jiayuguan, as the Russian star won one rook ending and
one crushing attacking game to triumph 3:1 in his match against China’s Yu
Yangyi and claim the $20,000 first prize. Jan Gustafsson, who provides video
analysis of the match, was full of praise for Grischuk’s approach to the final
two encounters, saying they were “played in the style of the old masters, just
showing great strategic play”.

Grischuk - Yu Yangyi Game 3 was finally a real clash

As we previously
reported, the first two games of the 4-game match in northwest China were instantly
forgettable 24 and 13 move draws. Then the players had a rest day, when activities
included simultaneous displays for the players against 20 local schoolchildren each:

Luckily after that we got some full-blooded encounters in
the final two games. You can replay all the games, with computer analysis,
using the selector below:

Game 3: The Great Wall of China is toppled

It’s been suggested that given the huge popularity of the
Petrov Defence (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nf6) among Chinese players it could be renamed
the Great Wall of China, but in this encounter Alexander Grischuk came prepared
to challenge it. He played a near-novelty on move 11 that sent Yu Yangyi into a
30-minute think and soon reached a promising ending. Grischuk commented (all player comments and photos were kindly provided by Chinese Chess Federation Press Officer Liang Ziming):

I got a slight advantage in the opening. I think from the opening to the
endgame the position was quite unpleasant for him and I feel it’s very hard to
defend for many hours. At one moment he made a big mistake and after that
the position became really hard for him to save.

At move 25, he should have played 25…Rb6! instead of 25…Kf8? and then I
have to exchange my active rook, because if I play 26.Rxa7 he has 26…Rc6, and I
can’t save the pawns (27.c4 runs into 27…d5!).

Grischuk’s technique in the remainder of the game was
extremely impressive, as Jan Gustafsson described in his recap of the whole
match:

Alexander Grischuk's scoresheet

Game 4: In the footsteps of Kasparov

The final game of the match

In the final game Yu Yangyi had to play for a win with White
to level the scores and force a rapid playoff. That led him to go for a new plan
with opposite-side castling in the Anti-Berlin that had the virtue of getting
Grischuk to think for 45 minutes by move 10. A key moment came after 12.Kb1:

Grischuk commented afterwards:

This game is very interesting. Yu Yangyi came up with a new plan of
attacking my kingside and I didn’t know how to react. I didn’t like the
standard knight manoeuvre and
decided to put my knight on a4, as Kasparov often did. He beat me once like
that. After that I managed to play d5, and then d4, and after that my position
is almost winning.

Here Kasparov played 24…Nxb2!, a sacrifice Grischuk could also have
played on move 22 against Yu Yangyi, but in mild time trouble Grischuk played a
pseudo-sac on c3 and slowly went about building his strategic edge until it was
simply overwhelming. There are fewer sadder sights in chess than Yangyi’s
position after 30.Nc1:

The white queen is a miserable defender of pawns and it’s obvious White
has no hopes of mounting any kind of counterattack on the kingside. All it
needed was for Grischuk to deliver the final blow, which he did by bringing one
more unit into the attack – 30…Qb6 31.h4 a5! and the a-pawn joined in the mass
assault on b3. The end came on move 36:

36.Bxb3! White resigns

A rematch in "normal" chess combined with the Chinese version of the game? Alas for Yu Yangyi, this was set up for an exhibition match between GM Ye Jiangchuan and Chinese Chess World Champion Zhao Guorong

A perhaps somewhat shell-shocked Yu Yangyi commented:

Overall I didn't play well in this match, especially in the last two
games. Grischuk showed great strength and did not give me too many chances. I'm
relatively weak in the opening and middlegame judgment, but I think I learned a
lot from this match.

Yu Yangyi dropped to world no. 19 after the match, making Wei Yi the
clear Chinese no. 2, while Grischuk climbed to world no. 11, only 4 points away
from 10th placed Ding Liren. Funnily enough, Grischuk can return to the Top 10 tomorrow, since he's remaining in China and his opponent in Round 8 of the Chinese League is none other than Ding Liren! You can follow that game from 07:00 CEST here on chess24. Another three rounds of the team event will be played in the following days.